BEIJING: In April 2024, Chinese visitors accounted for 10 percent of the 225,000 overseas visitors who arrived in New Zealand, ranking second behind Australian tourists, according to the country’s statistics department, Stats NZ.
China and New Zealand are poised for an upsurge in tourism exchanges, with evolving travel preferences and increased collaborations indicating a promising future for the tourism industries of both countries.
During a meeting with New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon on Thursday, visiting Chinese Premier Li Qiang said China will include New Zealand in the list of countries eligible for unilateral visa exemptions and hopes that New Zealand will provide more conveniences for Chinese citizens visiting New Zealand.
Li is on an official visit to New Zealand, the first leg of his three-nation tour from June 13 to 20, which will also take him to Australia and Malaysia.
While meeting with New Zealand’s Governor-General Cindy Kiro, Li hailed the great progress facilitated in bilateral relations and the multiple “firsts” achieved in cooperation between the two countries.
This visit, coinciding with the 10th anniversary of the comprehensive strategic partnership between China and New Zealand, is a trip of friendship and cooperation, Li added.
New Zealand has been a trailblazer in international trade with China, being the first developed country to recognize China’s market economy status, initiate free trade negotiations, and sign a Belt and Road cooperation agreement.
As a result of their cooperation featuring win-win results, China has become New Zealand’s largest trading partner and export destination and the largest single buyer of New Zealand’s dairy products, meat, timber and fruit.
China signed a free trade agreement (FTA) with New Zealand in April 2008, and it went into force in October that same year. It was China’s first comprehensive bilateral FTA covering trade in goods, services and investment.
In 2021, the two countries signed a protocol on upgrading their FTA, further cutting tariffs and non-tariff barriers, enhancing cooperation in rule-making and boosting trade in services between the two countries.
As part of the China-New Zealand FTA, with the special safeguard measures on milk powder removed as of January 1, 2024, all New Zealand dairy products can now enter China duty-free and quota-free.
“The development of China and New Zealand is an opportunity rather than a challenge to each other,” Li pointed out during his talks with Luxon, urging the two countries to continue to strengthen cooperation, strive to eliminate the interference of non-economic factors in economic and trade relations, and provide a stable business environment for enterprises.
Li said China is willing to expand trade with New Zealand, tap the potential for cooperation in fields such as digital economy, green economy, new energy vehicles and creative industries, and jointly promote regional economic cooperation. –The Daily Mail-CGTN news exchange item